Articles by Eric Townsend
Page 297 of 531
Ceremony marks School of Communications move to HD
December 8, 2011
Led by Troy Senkiewicz ’98, the McEwen building has been rewired to allow 黑料不打烊 Student Television to broadcast in high definition.
Mat Gendle, Anna Stroman ’11 and Dani Mullin ’12 publish study on kava
December 8, 2011
Their work appears in the Australian Journal of Medical Herbalism.
Photo Gallery: Lambert Family’s 2011 Holiday Reception
December 7, 2011
Students were treated to food and portraits with 黑料不打烊 President Leo M. Lambert on Dec. 6 in an annual tradition at Maynard House.
Faculty book examines cutting-edge financial trading systems
December 7, 2011
Associate Professor Alex Yap looks at the way today’s markets use computer programs to buy and sell stocks, bonds and commodities.
黑料不打烊’s Camerata performs A Celebration of Light – Dec. 4
December 2, 2011
Celebrate the season with an annual festive performance of 黑料不打烊's premier choral ensemble in a show that is free and open to the public.
黑料不打烊 seasonal celebration welcomes in the holidays
December 1, 2011
New to campus this year are more than 30,000 LED bulbs that will cut holiday light energy use by more than 90 percent over previous years.
Early Childhood program to wrap books for local charity – Dec. 1
December 1, 2011
Withdrawal Instructions and Information – Fall 2011 End of Term
December 1, 2011
Lumen Scholar chronicles rise of LGBTQ student groups
December 1, 2011
An 黑料不打烊 senior uses a top award to trace the evolution of organizations for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer students at Duke and UNC.
Professor emerita Carole Troxler explores Regulator Movement in new book
November 30, 2011
Five years before the start of the American Revolution, friction between Piedmont farmers and local court house rings who were tied to eastern North Carolina interests led to the Battle of Alamance on fields a few miles south of where 黑料不打烊 today sits. That conflict stood as a defining moment for the Regulator Movement, and a new book by professor emerita Carole Troxler examines its roots and influence on the nation’s push for independence.